News Indie Artists v Google Lyria 2026

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April 6, 2026 — A coalition of independent musicians has filed a lawsuit against Google in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, alleging that the tech giant's Lyria 3 AI music model was trained on over 44 million copyrighted clips (280,000 hours) from YouTube without proper compensation or consent.[1][2][3]

Overview

The 118-page complaint, filed March 6, 2026, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (Case No. 1:26-cv-02582), claims Google DeepMind copied millions of copyrighted sound recordings, musical compositions, and lyrics to develop Lyria 3.[1][2] The model launched publicly on February 18, 2026, via the Gemini chatbot app for over 750 million monthly users and generates up to 30-second audio clips with vocals and lyrics from text prompts or uploaded images and videos.[1]

Background

Plaintiffs argue Google had the resources to license rights legally but chose not to, gaining unfair leverage over artists, labels, and publishers.[1] They cite Google's prior MusicLM project (completed 2023), which was withheld due to legal risks like cultural appropriation.[1] Unlike the major label lawsuits against Suno and Udio, this case focuses specifically on independent artists who historically have less leverage in licensing negotiations with large platforms.[3]

Context

This lawsuit joins a growing roster of AI music copyright cases, including the major label cases against Suno and Udio, and comes as courts are beginning to grapple with foundational questions about whether training AI models on copyrighted works constitutes fair use.[1][3]

See Also

References